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Northern lights danced across the sky this week. See how they looked from space

The Northern lights, aurora borealis, photographed by an astronaut on the International Space Station on Aug. 17.
The Northern lights, aurora borealis, photographed by an astronaut on the International Space Station on Aug. 17. Photo from NASA's Bob Hines

The northern lights were visible from more areas of the U.S. than usual this week, forecasts showed. Photos from space captured the beautiful scenes.

“Absolutely spectacular aurora today!,” NASA astronaut Bob Hines tweeted on Aug. 17, sharing a collection of photos taken from the International Space Station.

The photos showed the Northern lights – bands of green light topped with pink hues – dancing above Earth’s surface. The lights seemed to curl around, forming semi-circular ribbons.

The Northern lights, aurora borealis, photographed by an astronaut on the International Space Station on Aug. 17.
The Northern lights, aurora borealis, photographed by an astronaut on the International Space Station on Aug. 17. Photo from NASA's Bob Hines

Slightly lower in the atmosphere, a person flying from Seattle to Anchorage captured the Northern lights before they faded out of sight the morning of Aug. 18. The photos showed the wing of a plane, glowing red-orange in the sunrise, with a line of green auroras in the background.

Down on the ground, people across the U.S. photographed their view of the aurora light show.

In Alaska, photos from Glacier Bay National Park showed the green and pink ribbons “decorating” the sky and stretching toward the horizon, the park service said in an Aug. 18 tweet.

In Sequim, Washington, a person photographed the aurora hovering above the horizon, city lights shining underneath, an Aug. 18 tweet showed.

Photos from the beach shore in Michigan caught the lights shimmering in the night sky, Focus Frankfort posted on Instagram on Aug. 18.

The auroras were visible to a larger geographic audience because of “geomagnetic storms” on the Sun’s surface that caused an increase in aurora activity.

Unfortunately, many people in the “North American mid-latitudes” – such as those in the central U.S. – could not see the auroras due to a drop in activity, meteorologist Anthony Torres explained in an Aug. 18 tweet.

In Indiana, viewers questioned whether they saw the Northern lights or a cloud before deciding it was the former.

Forecasts from the University of Alaska Fairbanks expect another surge in aurora activity from Sept. 3 to Sept. 5 when the Northern lights may again be visible in more areas of the U.S. than usual.

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This story was originally published August 19, 2022 at 12:19 PM.

Aspen Pflughoeft
McClatchy DC
Aspen Pflughoeft covers real-time news for McClatchy. She is a graduate of Minerva University where she studied communications, history, and international politics. Previously, she reported for Deseret News.
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